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Boca del Cielo's main distinction is a long lagoon called La Joya, which is separated from open ocean by a sliver of land or shoal broken in the middle. [1] [2] The name, which means “mouth of heaven,” refers to this opening which looks off into open ocean where the sun sets in the evening. [5]
Puerto Arista is located 195 km from the state capital of Tuxtla Gutierrez, making it a popular getaway for this city as well as Tonalá along with Boca del Cielo fifteen km east. [ 1 ] [ 6 ] Although it is crowded mostly during Mexican vacation periods such as Holy Week and Christmas and empty most of the rest of the year, [ 1 ] it is still ...
It is connected to the sea by the 2.4 km dredged San Marcos Channel, which connects the lagoons to the coastal Boca del Cielo inlet. [4] Los Patos-Solo Dios, a system of small and shallow lagoons in Chiapas – Los Patos, El Mosquito, La Balona, Pampita – connected by narrow channels and wetlands, with an area of 113 km 2.
It’s the former Boca Bay restaurant that eventually became Soundside Seafood & Raw Bar, which closed in November 2022. Bawcom had a career in restaurants, working in Texas and Florida, before ...
Isla del Carmen is a barrier island which separates the lagoon from the Bay of Campeche. There are two permanent channels connecting the lagoon to the Bay of Campeche – Boca de Puerto Real to the east of Isla del Carmen, and Boca del Carmen to the west. Inflow from the bay is via the Boca de Puerto Real, and outflow is via the Boca del Carmen.
Boca del Infierno (Spanish, "Bay of Fury", "Bay of Hell" or "Mouth of Hell") may refer to: Santa Gertrudis-Boca del Infierno Provincial Park, a provincial park on Nootka Island in British Columbia, Canada; A bay in Los Haitises National Park on the remote northeast coast of the Dominican Republic; A passage off Bahía de Jobos, Puerto Rico
Santa Gertrudis-Boca del Infierno Provincial Park, legally Santa-Boca Provincial Park, [2] [3] is a provincial park on Nootka Island in British Columbia, Canada.It was established on 30 April 1996 to protect and Santa Gertrudis Cove and Boca del Infierno Bay, which are located on the southeastern shore of Nootka Island.
The turtles mostly go to Playa Larga (Long Beach), which is located at the north side of the marine park. [1] The monkeys and sloths are seen at Quebrada de Sal (Salt Creek). [1] The park also has nearly eighty eighty different coral species. [6] The corals are believed to be over 10,000 years old. [4]